I’m a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Government at Harvard University. I am a political economist, interested in the politics of energy transitions and business lobbying more broadly. I study how policymakers strategically design climate policies to expand the political coalition in support of the energy transition, how coalitional strategies shape informational lobbying, and how family firms have an advantage in the use of campaign contributions in developing countries. To address my research questions, I use formal models, original data collection, and causal inference methods.

See my research, my CV, and my teaching slides.


Interests

  • Climate politics

  • Lobbying and money in politics

  • Formal political theory

Education

  • PhD in Government, expected May 2025

    Harvard University

  • Bachelor’s degree in Mathematics, 2017

    Universidad de Buenos Aires

Juan Dodyk


I’m a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Government at Harvard University. I am a political economist, interested in the politics of energy transitions and business lobbying more broadly. I study how policymakers strategically design climate policies to expand the political coalition in support of the energy transition, how coalitional strategies shape informational lobbying, and how family firms have an advantage in the use of campaign contributions in developing countries. To address my research questions, I use formal models, original data collection, and causal inference methods.

See my research, my CV, and my teaching slides.


Interests

  • Climate politics

  • Lobbying and money in politics

  • Formal political theory

Education

  • PhD in Government, expected May 2025

    Harvard University

  • Bachelor’s degree in Mathematics, 2017

    Universidad de Buenos Aires